亚洲视频免费一区,国产欧美综合一区二区,亚洲国产观看,91精品啪在线观看国产91九色,日本又黄又粗暴的gif动态图含羞,麻豆国产一区二区在线观看,中文字幕在线二区

Global EditionASIA 中文雙語(yǔ)Fran?ais
China
Home / China / Society

Yangtze River sees new engineering marvel

By Cang Wei in Nanjing | China Daily | Updated: 2025-09-10 08:53
Share
Share - WeChat
Vehicles travel across the Changtai Yangtze River Bridge in Jiangsu province, on Tuesday as the bridge officially opens to traffic. The bridge will significantly boost the coordinated development and integration of the Yangtze River Delta region. CHEN WEI/FOR CHINA DAILY

After six years of construction, the Changtai Yangtze River Bridge, which has set several world records, officially opened on Tuesday in Jiangsu province.

Spanning 10.03 kilometers, the bridge is the first crossing over the Yangtze River to integrate expressways, intercity railways and regular highways. It connects Changzhou and Taizhou, cutting travel time between the two cities from 1 hour and 20 minutes to about 20 minutes.

The bridge has set various world records. It is the longest-span cable-stayed bridge, the longest-span combined road-rail steel truss arch bridge and has the longest continuous length of steel truss girders. In addition, several world-first technologies were used during construction.

The bridge features a main span of 1,208 meters and two side spans of 388 meters. Its towers stand 350 meters tall — equivalent to a 120-story building.

"This is truly a world-class project," said Li Zhen, onsite commander of the construction command for the Jiangsu provincial transportation engineering construction bureau.

Li said the main span was designed to minimize impact on the Yangtze River's ecological environment and navigation routes.

According to him, the bridge's completion depended on four pioneering designs: a step-type caisson foundation to reduce scouring and self-weight; a steel-concrete hybrid structure with a spatial diamond-shaped tower; a steel-box-core concrete composite cable tower anchorage structure; and a temperature-adaptive longitudinal restraint system for the towerbeam.

For the first time, carbon fiber tendons — which are less affected by temperature changes — were used to create lightweight, high-strength, ultra-long composite material cables, marking a breakthrough in the application of new materials in bridge engineering.

The bridge supports a load capacity of 530,000 metric tons, with two main towers and stay cables providing structural support.

Li likened the towers to human legs, with their stability and strength depending on the underwater caisson.

Initial design calculations indicated the caisson needed to sink more than 65 meters deep to stabilize. But deeper foundations increase construction risks. Technology developed during construction reduced the caisson's height while ensuring stability.

"Even after these adjustments, the caisson remains a massive structure, equivalent to a 24-story building with the length of 13 basketball courts," Li said.

Positioning the caisson was highly challenging, he added.

"During operations, the team employed the latest intelligent robots for the first time. These robots could navigate complex underwater terrains and clean sand from the caisson's corners," he said, noting tasks once reliant on divers can now be completed remotely.

China Railway Baoji Bridge Group, the construction company, also developed several pioneering technologies.

"By introducing large-scale automated production equipment clusters, 3D laser scanning inspection systems, intelligent manufacturing processes and micro-innovations, we successfully overcame the high-standard quality control challenges of large bridges," said Ma Zenggang, project manager at the group.

The bridge passed its load test — considered its final exam — with 110 heavy trucks totaling 4,400 tons, demonstrating its structural integrity.

Jiangsu has now completed 20 river-crossing passages and has nine more under construction, effectively connecting counties and cities across the Yangtze.

Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US